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Re: New strategy at NY Times and libraries
Bernie Sloan wrote:
I believe we will be seeing more publishers experimenting with
doing away with subscription fees in favor of advertising
revenues. Times Select met the NYT expectations, and was bringing
in $10 million annually in subscription fees. The NYT thinks the
upside from ad revenues will be greater. Granted, the NYT is not
a scholarly journal, but I think this move will have a lot of
people in the publishing industry sitting up and taking notice.
I may have mentioned this before, but if this sort of trend
continues will it gradualy begin to marginalize the library, bit
by bit? In other words, if more information becomes available
freely will that lead people to think they need the library less?
Heather's Comment:
From my perspective, this depends a great deal on how we
librarians choose to position ourselves for an open future on the
world wide web. Are we seen as the champions of open access that
we are? Many libraries are now supporting publishing and
archiving of their user's works; this is a role that can be
expanded.
The need for information literacy is our ever-expanding
information universe will be increasing dramatically over the
next few years; it is absurb to think otherwise.
The need for reference assistance will increase. I'm sure I not
the only librarian who is constantly being asked for help to find
things, that people know are free on the internet. The most
common reference questions are likely to change, with "How can I
find some information on..." already a much less relevant
question today, but "How do I make sure I don't miss something
important"? and "How do I evaluate what I find?" increasing in
importance.
Collecting in an open age has more to do with selection and
preservation than with purchasing - but then, hasn't this always
been what librarianship is about? Purchasing is a means to an
end for libraries; it has never been the goal in and of itself.
If we find ourselves with time on our hands, why not find new
roles as research team members, provide the in-depth research
assistance we presently have no time for, and begin collecting
and preserving important blogs and listsers?
There is a future for librarians, an exciting one, in an open
age, if we choose to envision and pursue it. It is up to us!
Bernie Sloan's original message:
http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0709/msg00060.html
Any opinion expressed in this e-mail is that of the author alone,
and does not reflect the opinion or policy of BC Electronic
Library Network or Simon Fraser University Library
Heather Morrison, MLIS
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com